I'm studying accounting at uni. I was wondering what is the difference between working as an accountant vs studying, because i know that studying is alot harder and stressful like writting essays, assignments and exams.. but is working as an accountant in reality alot easier and is the job very repetitve??
Well it depends what area of accounting you work in. What stage are you at in your university studies?
For what it's worth, I hated studying accounting at uni and just didn't get it- but in practice, I (think I) am quite good working in the audit practice of a large accounting firm. You need to have some appreciation of the stuff in accounting 101 because otherwise how are you going to be able to do the much higher level stuff.
Keep in mind that most people doing university studies go onto become professional accountants as opposed to book keepers. For example, someone with a TAFE background would be responsible for calculating depreciaton or posting entries into the system to recognise a new asset being purchased. They may be asked to extract data from the general ledger and to reconcile between two different listings of accounts to ensure that each transaction is matched off.
In contrast, someone with a university background could be asked to consider whether or not an item meets the relevant recognition criteria to be capitalised (or expensed), and if it is to be capitalised, under what asset class should it be capitalised under? Furthermore they may also need to consider disclosure issues as to how it should be classified in the financial statements or disclosed. They wouldn't be responsible for performing the reconciliation of each item, but rather, they'd look to understand and investigate the implications where things did not reconcile or agree.
This is a very basic high level example of what the differences could be, and obviously there's much more to it than that (it depends what role in accounting you have- whether it be financial reporting, auditing, management accounting/decision support, consultancy, etc).